Grenoble is the scene of popular unrest …
Years: 1788 - 1788
June
Grenoble is the scene of popular unrest due to financial hardship from the economic crises.
The causes of the French Revolution affect all of France, but matters come to a head first in Grenoble.
Unrest in the town is sparked by the attempts of Cardinal Étienne Charles de Loménie de Brienne, the Archbishop of Toulouse and Controller-General of Louis XVI, to abolish the Parlements in order to enact a new tax to deal with France's unmanageable public debt.
Tensions in urban populations have been rising already due to poor harvests and the high cost of bread in France.
These tensions are exacerbated by the refusal of the privileged classes, the Church and the aristocracy, to relinquish any of their fiscal privileges.
They insist on retaining the right to collect feudal and seignorial royalties from their peasants and landholders.
This acts to block reforms attempted by the king's minister Charles Alexandre de Calonne and the Assembly of Notables that he had convoked in January 1787.
Added to this, Brienne, appointed the king's Controller-General of Finance on April 8, 1787, is widely regarded as being a manager without experience or imagination.
Shortly prior to the 7th of June in 1788, in a large meeting at Grenoble, those who attend the meeting decided to call together the old Estates of the province of Dauphiné.
The government responds by sending troops to the area to put down the movement.
